Will Technology Solve Water Shortages Problem ?

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Don’t think that water scarcity is only happen in rural area of India, China and Africa or only happen in under-developed countries. One example of the well developed city is in Sydney. Sydney’s water supply is one of the largest domestic water supply in the world. The capacity is as big as 9 times of London and 4 times of the New York city.  The Warragamba dam is the world largest dam.  Yet even with this capacious storage, it has proven to be insufficient. The authority still impose water restriction when the dam water reached certain level low.Ref :  http://www.sydneywater.com.au/SavingWater/WaterRestrictions/

These include restrictions on watering lawn, using sprinkler system, washing vehicles, hosing in paved areas, refilling swimming pools, etc.

Many people of the industrialised world tend to think that the technology will protect them from water scarcity like rural area.  For every degree of warm we create, we are heading toward a city like Sydney is now.

Two Extreme Weather in Europe

ukflood1.jpgIn western England, the worst flood hit 60 years high hit counties of Gloucestershire, Herefordshire, Worcestershire and Oxfordshire. The flood has affected power stations and water treatment plants.  The authorities said that in Gloucestershire, the western English county worst hit by the deluge, up to 350,000 people could be without running water for the next two weeks.

fire.jpgWhile in central and southeast Europe, people are struggling with the other extreme. Up to 500 Hungarians are estimated to have died last week as temperatures soared to nearly 42 degrees Celsius (108 Fahrenheit). 

Do we still need to prove or argue about global warming or climate change ? Do we have enough time to argue or prove it and stay ignorance about the issues while it is coming.

Well. Global warming is not coming,  it arrived !

Global Warming Badly hit Australia

farmingdrought.jpgSome facts that I acquired through the net on the severity of global warming affecting Australia :-

 1. One farmer takes his life every four days, according to the national mental health body Beyond Blue.

2. With the drought now in its sixth year, Australia’s big dry is the worst in over a century. Farmers have been hardest hit, forced to make a living sometimes in dustbowl conditions, raising emaciated cattle. With no prospect of significant rainfall before the New Year, the situation has reached crisis point and hope is as scarce as rainfall.

3. Many farmers are being forced to sell up, leaving land which often their families have worked on for generations.

4. It also estimates that more than 300,000 rural Australians experience depression each year, but only a small number seek help.

5. In New South Wales alone, 92 per cent of the state is officially in drought, and farmers have begun offloading stock before the hot, dry summer sets in, forcing them to buy feed and water. Sheep sales in the state are 70 per cent higher than last year, and at one saleyard last week, a record 67,000 sheep were sold in one day.

6. Agricultural economists, meanwhile, have slashed their winter crop forecasts by more than a third, and wheat exports have been suspended to meet domestic demand.

7. With the vegetation tinder-dry after one of the driest winters on record, hundreds of fires were burning across four states, fanned by high temperatures and strong winds. Much of the south-east was on an extreme fire danger alert. In Tasmania, scores of homes were threatened by fires advancing on the suburbs of Hobart, the state capital, this week.

8. Scientists warned the bushfire threat would increase over coming decades, as climate change brought more frequent hot weather, accompanied by less rainfall.

They point to the increased frequency and severity of drought-causing El Niño weather patterns, attributed to global warming, and to Australia’s leading role in poisoning the Earth’s atmosphere with greenhouse gases. Australians are among the world’s biggest energy consumers, and the country is one of the top per capita producers of carbon dioxide emissions. Nonetheless, it is one of only two industrialised nations, along with the United States, that has refused to sign the 1997 Kyoto Protocol, arguing that it would harm the economy.

A World inside a piece of Paper


Don’t think that saving a tree will not save the world, we are all interrelated. Just like a looking at the origination of a piece of paper, a paper come from a tree.  A tree needed water, sunshine and air to growth. Trees needed sunshine, human cannot growth without sunshine too.  Therefore the loggers cannot survive without sunshine.  In the eyes of a Bodhisattva, we should not only see a piece of papers as paper. We should see deeper into it, without the loggers, we cannot use this piece of paper.  Without the bread or foods for the logger, the logger cannot survive. So, we should feel gratitude on the bread or the food.   Without the wheat, the bread cannot be make.  So, we should feel gratitude to the wheat.  Without the farmers, the wheat will not be able to be make to bread. So, we should feel gratitude to the farmers.  The cycle going on until even a spoon or a folk, the person who make the spoon or folk, we should feel gratitude to them as everyone use them.  Everyone in this society is interrelated and we should feel gratitude to them.  So, in a piece of paper, we should see the whole living being inside. So, saving a piece of papers through resource recycling could save the world !

You Could Save The World !

haco2graph2.jpgSince the beginning of the Industrial Revolution, the concentrations of many of the greenhouse gases have increased. The concentration of CO2 has increased by about 100 ppm (i.e., from 280 ppm to 380 ppm in 2007). The first 50 ppm increase took place in about 200 years, from the start of the Industrial Revolution to around 1973; the next 50 ppm increase took place in about 33 years, from 1973 to 2006.  This figure show an alarming rate of increase of 50 ppm CO2 from 200 years to 33 years.   

1)       A GHG (Green House Gases) level of 650 ppm would “likely” warm the global climate by around 3.6° C, 750 ppm would lead to 4.3° C, 1000 ppm would lead to 5.5° C. 

2)      A climate change report predicts that sea levels will increase between 7 and 23 inches by 2100 if the ice sheets continue to melt as temperature rises.  Rising seas would erode more beaches and threaten coastal areas.

We know that carbon dioxide raises Earth’s temperature. We know that the temperature has already risen. We know that tomorrow we will emit more carbon dioxide than we did today. The ice is melting, the seas are rising, the temperature is increasing, and the storms are wreaking more and more havoc are coming. 

But do we know that it’s time for us to wake up and take action to reduce carbon dioxide around us.  Save the trees, you could save the forest.  Save the forest, you could save the mountain. Save the mountain, you could save the sea.  Save the sea, you could Save the World  !